The Wood Shed

This is an arial view of my wood shed. My Hardy sits about 50 feet from the house

The Dolmar 7900

As far as I'm concerned this is the baddest saw on the planet.

Husqvarna 346 XP

This is by far the greatest saw ever made. The 16 inch bar could easily be a laser beam the way it slices through wood.

346XP at Rest

Here is a picture of my 346XP. I just cut up these locust rounds before I snapped this picture

Big Orange

Say hello to my little friend! (use your best Al Pacino voice) Big Orange is a Husky 455 Rancher with an 18 inch bar. This thing is bad news. It is such a powerfull saw but I am suprised how smooth it operates and how easy it is on fuel.

14 inch Poulan

I swear by the Poulan's. I know they are described by some as cheap "throw away" saws but I have had great sucess with mine. This one is six years old and still runs strong.

Fiskars Super Splitter

Throw your 6# maul away and get yourself one of these. This may be the greatest invention ever.

My stuff

This is a picture of my Hardy H2, my homemade woodshed and my woodpile for the winter of 08-09. The Hardy is in the middle of the woodpile. I use my woodpile as a windbreak and a snowfence.

Heat Exchanger Installed

This is me installing the heat exchanger. This should give you a good idea its location and approximate size. The tan thing is my forced air furnace in the basement

Heat Exhanger pt.2

This is what the heat exchanger looks like once installed. The orange lines are the 3/4 inch hot water Pex lines that carry the water between my OWB and the heat exchanger. If you lean in and squint you can see the copper tubes in the exchanger. A closeup is provided below.

Close up of the Heat Exchanger

I added this picture to show you a close up of the heat exchanger. It looks just like a radiator from a large truck. I did all this installation myself saving $1000.

Pex lines coming thru basement wall

The two lines going to the left are the feed and return for my hot water tank. The two lines to the right go between the OWB and the heat exchanger.

Tee on hot water tank feed

My Hardy H2 also heats my domestic hot water. The top line goes out to the OWB to pick up heat and the bottom line fills my hot water tank with hot water. You can see the valves I can switch to bypass this when my Hardy is not burning in the summer.

Followers

About Me

I am a family man who asked a simple question..."Why do I have to pay money to heat my house?" Well, after some research I found my answer in purchasing an Outdoor Wood Boiler (OWB). Specifically a Hardy H2. While nothing is free...I traded money for my labor...I have been heating my 3000 sq ft. home for the last five years without spending a dime in gas. I hope you find this blog helpful if you are interested in buying one of these smokers or even if you have a OWB and just want to hang out with someone who knows a little bit about your life. I hope you get a chance to stop by as our house is always warm, no matter how cold it is outside.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Ok*In case you haven't heard, there is a pretty big winter storm surging across north America so I hope everyone throws an extra log on the fire tonight.*Today, I took advantage of the "calm" before the storm and did some rearranging to my wood pile. I have a section of wood that is not under a roof so I spent the evening moving some of that wood under the roof of my wood shed. This area of the wood pile has a lot of smaller round logs I like to throw into the Hardy H2 to help the larger logs burn. Below is a picture of the wood shed and to the right is the wood I pulled from the snow and stacked under the roof. The small rounds I pulled are mostly maple and black cherry. The split wood to the far right is honey locust.

*The shed was totally full of logs to start my burning season...that is four rows deep of wood. You can see how much I have burnt this year by how empty the shed looks now below. The logs I just moved into the shed are to the right in the picture below. Now that I have done this work, I am ready for the storm! Tonight the freezing rain and icing began covering my Hardy H2 in a small layer of ice. When I think about how the ice and snow builds up on the top of my Hardy H2...I'm impressed given it's holding 100 gallons of 170 degree (f) water! It's pretty nicely insulated!*Now I will wait and see how bad this storm is. If there are a lot of trees downed by the ice I have a feeling my phone may be ringing in the morning. A lot of people out my way know I am always looking for wood.*OWB